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  • 20
    Apr
    2013
    11:50am, EDT

    Border Patrol agent cleared of charges he abused undocumented immigrant

    NBC 7 San Diego

    Luis Fonseca, center, leaves the courthouse in downtown San Diego after his acquittal.

    By Paul Krueger and R. Stickney, NBCSanDiego.com

    Jurors acquitted a U.S. Border Patrol agent of charges he abused an undocumented immigrant.

    Luis Fonseca hugged his attorney just moments after jurors returned the verdict in San Diego Friday.

    Prosecutors had charged Fonseca with a felony civil rights violation arguing the agent kneed and choked a 27-year-old immigrant the Border Patrol's Imperial Beach station in July 2011.

    Read original story on NBCSanDiego.com


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Jurors saw a video tape of the incident, captured by a surveillance camera inside the station.

    Fonseca's lawyer, Stuart Adams, said that video was incomplete and misleading. He also said the alleged victim faked his injuries. 

    During the trial, Fonseca was on unpaid administrative leave. He’s lost everything from his dignity to his house and his car, Adams said. 

    Outside court, Adams said the verdict will help restore his client's reputation.

    "Clearly this is a huge step,” Adams said. “This was the block that was in the way. It's been pushed aside."

    He added that his client loves the Border Patrol and hopes to return to his position with the agency.

    In a statement released following the verdict, U.S. Attorney Laura Duffy expressed disappointment.

    “We believe it is our responsibility to stand up for the civil rights of everyone and felt this was an important case to bring. The U.S. Attorney’s office will always elect to bring such cases when we believe the evidence is sufficient to do so -- no matter how tough the case may be.” 

    280 comments

    why was a case involving a criminal, non citizen allowed to proceed against this agent? The agents job is to stop these criminals and sometimes physical force is necessary. If the agent had shot the criminal, he would be in trouble, tazerred the criminal, he would be in trouble, wrestle the criminal …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: agent, abuse, border-patrol, sandiego, acquitted, undocumented-immigrant, nbcsandiego
  • 16
    Aug
    2012
    1:39pm, EDT

    Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer's ban on driver's licenses for undocumented immigrants likely to wind up in court

    Jack Kurtz / Zume Press

    DREAM Act students march in front of the Arizona Capitol on Wednesday after Gov. Jan Brewer said the state will not give young undocumented immigrants who qualify for a deportation reprieve any public benefits, including driver's licenses.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS
    By James Eng, NBC News

    Legal experts say they expect a court challenge to Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer’s order denying driver’s licenses and public benefits to young undocumented immigrants who qualify to stay in the U.S. under a new Obama administration program.

    Brewer on Wednesday signed an executive order reiterating that state agencies are required to deny licenses and other taxpayer-funded public benefits to “unlawfully present aliens.” That includes those undocumented immigrants who are approved to stay and work in the U.S. for another two years under the federal government’s new Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.


    “The issuance of  Deferred Action or Deferred Action USCIS employment authorization documents to unlawfully present aliens does not confer upon them any lawful or authorized status and does not entitle them to any additional public benefit,” Brewer’s order said.

    Wednesday was the first day that certain immigrants who arrived in the U.S. unlawfully as children could apply for the right to stay in the U.S. for two years, with possibility of renewal, without being deported. To be eligible, immigrants must prove they arrived in the U.S. before they turned 16, are 30 or younger, have been living in the country at least five years and are in school or graduated or served in the military. They cannot have been convicted of certain crimes or otherwise pose a safety threat.

    In addition to driver’s licenses, Brewer's order bars undocumented immigrants who qualify for the deportation reprieve from public benefits that include state-subsidized child care; KidsCare, a children's health-insurance program; unemployment benefits; business and professional licenses and government contracts, Brewer spokesman Matthew Benson told The Republic newspaper.

    President Obama's new program covers more than 1 million people brought to the U.S. as illegal immigrants. Applicants around the country say they no longer have to live in the shadows. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    "As the (Department of Homeland Security) has said repeatedly ... these individuals do not have lawful status," Benson told The Republic. "They are able to remain in the country and not be deported and not be prosecuted, but they do not have lawful status."

    Evelyn Cruz, an Arizona State University clinical law professor and director of the Immigration Law & Policy Clinic, said she expects a legal challenge because Brewer’s order might conflict with federal statutes. “Whenever you have something murky you’re going to have lawsuit,” she told NBC News on Thursday.

    Cruz noted that the REAL ID Act of 2005, a federal law that modified requirements for state driver’s licenses and ID cards, specifically listed immigrants who have been granted “deferred action” as among groups of people eligible for a license.

    NBCLatino: Arizona immigration activists vow to block Brewer’s ban on benefits for undocumented immigrants

    “For something this significant I would not be surprised if there were multiple groups that end up challenging this order,” said Regina Jefferies, a Phoenix immigration lawyer and chair of the Arizona chapter of the American Immigration Lawyers Association.

    She said Brewer’s order conflicts with both state and federal law.

    Immigrants in Arizona have in the past been granted “deferred action” for other reasons long before the new Childhood Arrivals program was announced, Jefferies said.

    “Brewer quoted the correct statute but problem is the state laws interchangeably use ‘legal status’ and ‘lawful presence’ like they mean the same thing. They don’t. They mean very different things under federal immigration law,” she said.

    “The state of Arizona has regularly issued licenses to people lawfully present in the U.S. even though they don’t have lawful status.”

    In contrast, California's Department of Motor Vehicles says it will issue driver's licenses to young illegal immigrants once the Obama administration grants them work permits. A 1993 California law bans driver's licenses for illegal immigrants, but the DMV will treat as "temporary legal residents" anyone who qualifies for the deportation relief program, meaning the state ban won't apply to them, DMV spokesman Mike Marando said Wednesday, according to an article in the Mercury News. 

    Arizona immigrant groups upset with Brewer’s directive marched to the state Capitol on Wednesday night in protest.

    "She shattered my dreams today," said one of the protesters, Lorenzo Santillan, 24, of the Arizona Dream Act Coalition, The Republic reported.

    Arizona passed one of the nation’s toughest anti-illegal immigration laws in the country, SB 1070, in 2010 and Brewer, a harsh critic of President Barack Obama's immigration policy, has characterized Obama’s new deferral program as amnesty. The U.S. Supreme Court in June struck down key provisions of the Arizona law but let stand one requiring police to check the status of someone they suspect is not in the United States legally.

    Related stories:

    Young undocumented immigrants line up for chance to legally stay, work in US 
    NBC Latino: Tips on filing a successful deferred action application
    Illegal immigrants are warned of scammers as new Obama policy takes effect
    Chasing a 'dream': Immigrant youth seek legal status
    NBC Latino: Opinion: Confusion over Obama’s immigration changes

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    679 comments

    If they go home, they can get one from their country.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: arizona, immigration, illegal-immigration, undocumented-immigrant, jan-brewer

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